P
Prasad Daggupati
Researcher at University of Guelph
Publications - 87
Citations - 3501
Prasad Daggupati is an academic researcher from University of Guelph. The author has contributed to research in topics: Watershed & Soil and Water Assessment Tool. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 78 publications receiving 2210 citations. Previous affiliations of Prasad Daggupati include Kansas State University & Texas A&M University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Hydrologic and Water Quality Models: Performance Measures and Evaluation Criteria
TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analysis of performance data reported in recent peer-reviewed literature for three widely published watershed-scale models (SWAT, HSPF, WARMF), and one field-scale model (ADAPT) is performed.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Recommended Calibration and Validation Strategy for Hydrologic and Water Quality Models
Prasad Daggupati,Naresh Pai,Srinivasulu Ale,Kyle R. Douglas-Mankin,Rebecca W. Zeckoski,Jaehak Jeong,Prem B. Parajuli,Dharmendra Saraswat,Mohamed A. Youssef +8 more
TL;DR: The comprehensive C/V strategy described herein will allow for better interpretation of future modeling studies, improved utility of modeling applications, and more systematic advancement of H/WQ models.
Journal ArticleDOI
Introducing a new open source GIS user interface for the SWAT model
TL;DR: The aim of this paper was to develop an open source user interface for the SWAT model, QSWAT, which is written in the Python programming language and uses various functionalities of the open source geographic information system, QGIS.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cross‐scale intercomparison of climate change impacts simulated by regional and global hydrological models in eleven large river basins
Fred F. Hattermann,Valentina Krysanova,Simon N. Gosling,Rutger Dankers,Prasad Daggupati,Chantal Donnelly,Martina Flörke,Shaochun Huang,Yury Motovilov,S. Buda,Tao Yang,Tao Yang,Christoph Müller,Guoyong Leng,Qiuhong Tang,Felix T. Portmann,Stefan Hagemann,Dieter Gerten,Dieter Gerten,Yoshihide Wada,Yoshimitsu Masaki,Tadesse Alemayehu,Yusuke Satoh,Luis Samaniego +23 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare hydrological changes simulated by 9 global and 9 regional HMs for 11 large river basins in all continents under reference and scenario conditions, and find that the sensitivity to climate variability and climate change is comparable for impact models designed for either scale.
Journal ArticleDOI
Impact of model development, calibration and validation decisions on hydrological simulations in West Lake Erie Basin
Prasad Daggupati,Haw Yen,Haw Yen,Michael J. White,Raghavan Srinivasan,Jeffrey G. Arnold,Conor S. Keitzer,Scott P. Sowa +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model in the West Lake Erie Basin (WLEB) to examine the influence of several critical decisions that will influence the ability of the model to represent real world conditions.